WORLD DIVIDED INTO TWO CAMPS
LONDON, October 15. Reviewing the Paris Conference, the “Daily Telegraph” in a leading article says that though the conference has done its assigned work it has not achieved the major object of promoting a better atmosphere between the Slav bloc and the rest, Field-Marshal Smuts was thereforeright when he recently said that the chief danger apparent during the conference was the division of the world into two camps, ' When Mr. Stalin made his reassuring deelax-ations three weeks ago there wak’hdpe that this danger would die away, but Mr. M'oiotov'ii final philippic appeal made it only too clear that, it was very much alive. The newspaper adds that though the conference has certainly not brought the world nearer to war it has brought the world little if at all nearer to peace, for which mankind Is longing. True progress tov/ards peace requires both a goal and a background. 'The goal has' always been there, but the background is still lacking.
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Greymouth Evening Star, 17 October 1946, Page 8
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164WORLD DIVIDED INTO TWO CAMPS Greymouth Evening Star, 17 October 1946, Page 8
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